Ok, I was born and raised in Missouri and after all of these years, I look in on this video to learn that my own State hast he Honey Bee as the State Insect! Wow, how little I know about my own State. I never get tired of listening to the wisdom and practices of Dr. Leo. Thank you for sharing!
@@bza069 in the area: Kohala District of the Big Island, we had a real problem with Too Many Bees, swarming and taking over the community. This worked out well for us since although I was a Jorneyman Carpenter, I now had my aging parents to provide help and healthcare for. Honeybees were not only providing a means of support for my remaining at home to care for the folks, it turned out to be very beneficial: I no longer got sick ! Bee products: honey , beeswax, pollen were making me healthier! I haven’t been sick since starting into beekeeping, over 25 years.
I started growing vegetables this year in a meadow where I keep bees! I never really considered the effect of bees on my vegetables. I found myself laughing while harvesting my climbing beans. Hands down the best crops I've ever had! Also I had some broccoli that I neglected and left too go to seed, this was amazing because I found when ALL other food sources had long gone my broccoli was still flowering and when the temperature permitted the bees were working them. And in the same meadow I caught a swarm with a box in a tree, not from my hives either. I was at the field at the time. I was watching bees coming and going from the woods scouting my box and a couple of days later I watched them come in over head. I happened to be staying at my meadow during the days the scouted and came. A lovely sight.
Dr. Sharashkin, I thoroughly enjoyed your talk. I am about 6 months into beekeeping and have only one hive. I am using the standard Langstroth hive and do not want to treat my bees. I am quickly realizing that everyone is being taught the commercial beekeeping model and it is not good for the bees. I am on the West Coast of Florida. What is the best way to start to capture bees? How can I get a horizontal hive? Is there a difference between catching a hive that shows up in someone's soffit vs capturing a hive in the woods (something we don't have a lot of)?Thank you - Robert
I have watched and listened to Dr Sharashkin and read his books. He comes to us with a great deal of common senses and proven expertise. A wind of change in the beekeeping world driven by Dr Sharashkin and others.............
My hives , when on that land of the Big Island, yielded 1560 pounds per hive per year, but needed to be harvested each 2 weeks or it would crystallize in your combs and not be harvestable. So, we harvested 1200 pounds from 20 hives 26 times a year and than let it go 'rock hard' in each 5 gallon bucket[in just 3 days] and run it through a champion juicer set up to Homogenize cycle and than it sold out as fast as we bottled it.
What is going on with hundreds and hundreds of hives disappearing? I mean the bees are gone. No moths no beetles. Is it poison in the plants? Is it microwave? Cell phones? No dead bees just gone. One owner had 90 hives all gone. Happening all over world.
Dr. Sharashkin, thank you for your presentation. I started with Langstroth stacked hives and two years ago started converting my hives into "Long Langs". I tried a Kenyan Top Bar Hive, but was frustrated with the odd shape. My new horizontal hives can use the same Langstroth frames or straight top-bars. I use a mix and cover the top of the frames with canvas or linoleum, then a hinged roof. I must disagree with you about the adaptability of the Italian Bees. This South Pacific island nation was introduced to Italian bees sometime in the 60's by Australian (or maybe New Zealand) agriculturalists. Until last year there had not been any other European genetics introduced. So my bees have survived and adapted over 6 decades to this tropical climate. They are gentle and easily worked. Unfortunately, they, like their keeper, have gone a bit tropo over the years. There being no winter or even long spells of dearth have reduced their honey production to less than half. But that still works fine when you are on Pacific time! You have inspired me to set out a couple of bait hives around my apiary. Thank you.
he said adaptable to cold thats all. all life is adaptable but its slow if you keep them they will adapt the problem is when people dont keep the ones that survive and split from them but just buy new imported bees from a different climate.I think that was the point
I'm from Brooklyn I think you're awesome very educational I for one am allergic to bees but it's so tempting to learn more and to do it myself thank you I appreciate it your your input you're totally awesome
you dont the brood frames usually have 3 to 6 inches of honey on them this is what they need to survive the winter. sfter the brood frames stop there will be plenty of frames of just honey those you harvest
You probably don't want to they have advantages but the aggression can often be exacerbated by hybridisation when they first moved into an area and made worse by other bee keepers who keep other subspecies that constantly hybridise with localised Africanised bees.
Hawaiian climate means there’s always another flowering about to occur and there’s no less than 6 productive climate zones to place your hives. Within these zones, our bees produced 24 different honeys in bee yards, which sold out weekly at the 17 stores we had it sold at and 2 farmers markets. Kiawe(Mesquite) Honey was the main crop, coming in from 20 hives in the Hawaiian Honey Forests of South Kohala. Each 2 weeks, these hard working bees put out a total of 1200 pounds or gauging harvests by 1 hive per year =1560 pounds and we never had a storage problem, it sold out at market as fast as we produced it bottled. Of the other 2 seasonal honeys: Macadamia Nut Honey and X-mas Berry, these came in at a slower rate during their flowering season and were steady production. 21 other types were Rare and got a crowds to our farmers market stands even with the price ranging from $8-25 per pound, 25-30 years ago, they always sold out. Now with today’s prices for the common Kiawe Honey at $15-20 per pound, I can only imagine what the rare honeys might be selling for if anyone offered them. We had to move to another island and then to the San Diego area.
Dr. Sharashkin beekeepers can collaborate with native pollinators but they need to realize that there is not enough habitat because there are too many people in the world using it for industrial applications
if more people keep local bee esp farms then they will grow more diverse habits to help the bees which in turn helps the native pollinators. most farms or homesteaders wont do it just to help the native pollinators( I wish they would) but if they are getting something out of it which helps them make the money they need in this money driven world then they will
I have been following Dr Leo and l live in a South Africa we only have suppliers of Langstroth hives. How can l get Horizontal hive plans- to import hives here is too expensive! Regards Barry
If there is not water close by or orchards or wild flowers or gardens they will not stay from what I understand. They need a place of protection to make their home.
Honey bees are not native bees in North America. Most swarms do not survive, about 90% according to studies. But they can and do survive. If they have forage you can let them swarm but It doesn't mean you will be left with a hive in the end.
I have a honeybee hive starting in my greenhouse. It’s a poly tunnel style high poly tunnel greenhouse with a metal frame. And they have started to build a nest behind the tarp flap of the slipper door on the metal frame post. It’s still very small. But when I was in there today, I noticed about 15 honeybees in there, and when I went to go investigate, I saw a little bees nest, starting with larva in it. I would love connect with the speaker somehow, maybe via email? So I couldn’t discuss what I am to do with this. I would love to have feral bees on my property, and naturally let them do their thing. I am not sure how I should do this.
Last note : Hawaii has no less than 9 Races of Honeybees, Dutch Bee ,German Bees, Russian Bees[hard to focus on, they are always rushing around] an d more.
thet was great,, thank ya fer the tips an encouragement, now ai need ta git on the ball an start ta build the bee traps an hives,,, thank ya fer the video
Many of the frames I have seen have either steel or fishing wire wound I three vertical lines throughout the frame. This encourages straight comb and additional stability when putting in into a centrifuge. Finding an extractor that fits the deeper frame size is a little more of a challenge, but not impossible.
On his website he has plans that use raw wool as insulation, but also another of plain wood. However, both plans call for 1.5 inch wood sides, which is much greater than the standard Langstroth hive would use. This greater insulation helps in both summer and winter.
@@russianhorde the original Langstroth hive was also 1.75 to 2 inch thick but all the hives nowadays are very thin due to the commercial Langstroth hive but rev Langstroth did not make it this way
It would be hilarious to listen to Leo make his assertions in the presence of legitimate experts like Bob Binney with a response to each of them. He'd look like such an idiot.